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200 BIBLIOGRAPHY
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WRITINGS OF C.J. DUCASSE*
BOOKS
CauSlltion and the Types of Necessity. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1924. Reprinted by Dover Publications with an introduction by Vincent Tomas and four papers added, 1969.
The Philosophy of Art. New York: The Dial Press, 1929. Reprinted'by Dover Publications with revisions and a paper added which replies to critics of the book, 1966.
The Relation of Philosophy to General Education. General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation, for private circulation, 1932.
Philosophy as a Science: Its Matter and its Method. New York: Oskar Piest, 1941. Art, the Critics and You. New York: Oskar Piest, 1944. Reprinted in 1948 by Hafner
and in 1955 by Bobbs-MerrilL Nature, Mind, and Death. The Cams Lectures, Eighth Series, 1949. LaSalle, m.: Open
Court Publishing Co., 1951. A Philosophical Scrutiny of Religion. New York: The Ronald Press Co., 1953. A Critical Examination of the Belief in a Life after Death. Springfield, m.: Charles
C. Thomas, 1961. Truth, Knowledge and Causation. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1968. A collec
tion of fifteen previously published papers with a preface by Ducasse. Paranormal Phenomena, Science, and Life after Death. New York: Parapsychology
Foundation, Inc., 1969. A collection of three papers with a foreword by Ducasse and an introduction by J.M.O. Wheatley, the title essay unpublished, the remaining papers previously published.
ARTICLES
"The Retina and Righthandedness" (in collaboration with H.C. Stevens). Psychological Review 19, No.1, 1912.
"A Defense of Ontological Liberalism," Journal of Philosophy 21, No. 13, 1924. "R.M. Blake, Sceptic," Journal of Philosophy 21, No. 19, 1924. "The Non-Existence of Time," Journal of Philosophy 22, No.1, 1925. "Explanation, Mechanism, and Teleology," Journal of Philosophy 22, No.6, 1925. "A Liberalistic View of Truth," Philosophical Review 34, No.6, 1925. "Liberalism in Ethics," International Journal of Ethics 35, No.3, 1925. "Significant Form," The Nation 122, Febr. 3, 1926. "On the Nature and the Observability of the Causal Relation",' Journal of Philosophy
23, No.3, 1926. "A Neglected Meaning of Probability," Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress
of Philosophy, 1926.
* Reviews, translations and reprints of articles have been omitted.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 201
"Words of Cheer for Worms," The Nation 123, Sept. 8, 1926. "Seven Popular Dialogues on Various Questions in Aesthetics," The Providence Journal
(newspaper), Jan. 5, 19, Feb. 2, March 2, 30, April 20, June 15, 1927. " 'Mind and Its Place in Nature'," Philosophical Review 36, No.4, 1927. "Terminological Anarchy," Philosophical Review 37, No.2, 1928. "What has Beauty to do with Art? ," Journal of Philosophy 25, No.7, 1928. "Is Art the Imaginative Expression of a Wish?," Philosophical Review 37, No.3, 1928. "Six Discussions of Current Art Exhibits," The Providence Journal (newspaper), 1930. "The Place of Philosophy in an University Education," Brown Alumni Monthly 30,
No.6, 1930. "A Philosopher Considers the Price of Liberty," The Providence Evening Bulletin,
Jan. 25, 1930. "Of the Spurious Mystery in Causal Connections," Philosophical Review 39, No.4,
1930. "On our Knowledge of Existents," Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress
of Philosophy, 1930. "Philosophical Liberalism," Contemporary American Philosophy, voL I, 1930. "What Should Pembroke Girls Study? ," The Record (Pembroke newspaper), May 16,
1931. "Art History, Criticism, and Esthetics," Creative Art 9, No.1, 1931. "Some Questions in Aesthetics," The Monist 42, No.1, 1932. "Graduate Work at Brown," Brown Alumni Monthly 32, No.6, 1932. "Of the Nature and Efficacy of Causes," Philosophical Review 41, No.4, 1932. "The Aim and Content of Graduate Training in Ethics," International Journal of
Ethics 43, No.1, 1932. Untitled address, Symposium in Honor of the Seventieth Birthday of Alfred North
Whitehead. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1932. "On the Attributes of Material Things," Journal of Philosophy 31, No.3, 1934. "Is Scientific Verification Possible in PhilosophY?," Philosophy of Science 2, No.2.,
1935. "A Dialogue on the Fine Arts," The Town Crier (newspaper, Providence, R.I.), 1935. "Mr. Collingwood on Philosophical Method," Journal of Philosophy 33, No.4, 1936. "The Meaning of Probability: Discussion," Journal of the American Statistical
Association 31, No. 193, 1936. "Introspection, Mental Acts, and Sensa," Mind 45, No. 178, 1936. "Verification, Verifiability, and Meaningfulness," Journal of Philosophy 33, No.9,
1936. "Are the Humanities Worth Their Keep? ," American Scholtzr 6, No.4, 1937. "The Animal with Red Cheeks," American Scholar 7, No.3, 1938. "The Esthetic Object," Journal of Philosophy 35, No. 12, 1938. "Symbols, Signs and Signals," Journal of Symbolic Logic 4, No.2, 1939. "Conditions of Social Progress," The Providence Evening BuOetin, 1939. "Has Science Increased Race Happiness?," The Providence Evening Bulletin, April 14,
1939. "Philosophy and Natural Science," Philosophical Review 44, No.2, 1940. "Concerning the Status of So-called 'Pseudo-Object' Sentences," Journal of Philosophy
37, No. 12, 1940. "The Nature and Function of Theory in Ethics," Ethics 5 1, No.1, 1940.
202 BIBLIOGRAPHY
"Some Critical Comments on a Nominalistic Analysis of Resemblance," Philosophical Review 49, No.6, 1940.
"Propositions, Opinions, Sentences and Facts," Journal of Philosophy 37, No. 26, 1940.
"Truth, VerifIability, and Propositions about the Future," Philosophy of Science 8, No.3,1941.
"Some Observations Concerning the Nature of Probability," Journal of Philosophy 38, No. 15, 1941.
"Objectivity, Objective Reference, and Perception," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 2, No.1, 1941.
"Art Appreciation and the Curriculum," The Associlltion of American Collegell Bulletin 27, No.3, 1941.
"Moore's 'The Refutation of Idealism'," The Philosophy of G.E. Moore, The Library of Living Philosophers, ed. by P.A. Schilpp, vol. IV. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press, 1942.
"John Herschel's Philosophy of Science," Studies in the History of Culture. Menasha: George Banta Publishing Company, 1942.
"Is a Fact a True Proposition? ,"Journal of Philosophy 39, No.5, 1942. "Correctness vs. Occurrence of Appraisals," Journal of Philosophy 39, No.5, 1942. "Concerning Professor Bogholt's Criticism of My 'Disposal of Naturalism'," Philo-
sophical Review 51, No. 2, 1942. "Some Comments on C.W. Morris's 'Foundations of the Theory of Signs'," Philosophy
and Phenomenological Research 3, No.1, 1942. "Esthetic Contemplation and Sense Pleasure - A Reply," Journal of Philosophy 40,
No.6,1943. "What is the War Doing to Our Morals?," The Providence Sunday Journal, August,
1943. "Uberal Education and the College Curriculum," J0Ul7l41 of Higher Education 15,
No. 1,1944. "Propositions, Truth and the Ultimate Criterion of Truth," Philosophy and Pheno
menological Research 4, No.3, 1944. "On Our Knowledge of the Meaning of Words," Proceedings of the Congres Inter
national de Philosophie Consacre awe Problemes de la Connaissance, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, 1944.
The Method of Knowledge in Philosophy (The Howison Lecture for 1944), University of Californill Publications in Philosophy 16, 1945.
Philosophy in American Education (co-authored with Brand Blanshard, Charles W. Hendel, Arthur E. Murphy and Max C. Otto). New York: Harper's, 1945.
"Facts, Truth and Knowledge," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 5, No.3, 1945.
"Some Comments on Professor Nagel's Latest Remarks," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 5, No.3, 1945.
"Some Comments on Professor Sellars' 'Knowing and Knowledge'," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 5, No.3, 1945.
"The Subject-Matter Distinctive of Philosophy," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 6, No.3, 1946.
"Aesthetics and the Aesthetic Activities," Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 5, No. 3,1947.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 203
"Some Comments on Professor Wild's Criticism of My Views on Semiosis," Philo80phy and Phenomenological Research 8, No. 2, 1947.
Science: Its Nature, Method, and Scope. David Wight Prall Memorial Lecture, 1947. Piedmont, California: The Prall Memorial Foundation, voL III, No.1, 1947.
"Some Comments on Professor Wild's Preceding Remarks," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 8, No.2, 1947.
Is a Life After Death Possible? (The Agnes E. and Constantine E.A. Foerster Lecture on the Immorality of the Soul, 1947), Berkeley: University of California Press, 1948.
"Discussion" (comment on M. Dynnik's "Contemporary Bourgeois Philosophy in the United States"), Modem Review 2, No. 2, 1948.
"C.I. Lewis' Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation," Philosophical Review 57, No.3, 1948.
"Aiken's 'Criteria for an Adequate Aesthetics': Discussion," Journal of Aesthetics and Art Oiticism 7, No. 2, 1948.
"Graduate Preparation for Teaching," Journal of Higher Education 19, No.9, 1948. "Some Observations Concerning Particularity," Philosophical Review 58, No.6, 1949. "Causality," Collier's Encyclopedia 4, 1950. "Cynicism," Collier's Encyclopedia, 6,1950. "The 'Introductory' Course in Philosophy," Philosophers' Newsletter, No. XL, 1950. "Reality, Science and Metaphysics," Synthese 8, Nos. 6-7,1950-51. "Qu'est-ceque 1a Philosophie?," Synthese 8, Nos. 6-7, 1950-51. Untitled contribution, Chapter VI, Democracy in a World of Tensions. A symposium
prepared by UNESCO, ed. by Richard McKeon. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951.
"Francis Bacon's Philosophy of Science," Structure, Method and Meaning: EsSilys in Honor of Henry M. Sheffer, ed. by Paul Henle, H.M. Kallen, and S.K. Langer. New York: liberal Arts Press, 1951.
"Whewell's Philosophy of Scientific Discovery," Philosophical Review 60, Nos. 1 and 2,1~L .
"Paranormal Phenomena, Nature, and Man" (The First John William Graham Lecture on Psychic Science, 1951), Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 45, No.4, 1951.
"Mr. G.N.M. Tyrrell's 'Man the Maker'," Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 46, No.4, 1952.
"The MacDonald 'Spook' Collection," Bulletin of the Hartford Seminary Foundation, No. 14, 1952.
"Philosophy, Education, and the Nature of Man," Journal of the Phi Beta Kappa Society 31, No.4, 1952.
"Causality, Creation, and Ecstasy," The Philosophical Forum 2, 1953. "Patterns of Survival," Tomo"ow I, No. 4,1953. "Deductive Probability Arguments," Philosophical Studies 4, No.2, 1953. "Scientific Method in Ethics," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 14, No.1,
1953. "A 'Terminal' Course in Philosophy," Journal of Higher Education 24, No.8, 1953. "Demos on 'Nature, Mind, and Death'," Review of Metaphysics 7, No.2, 1953. "Are Religious Dogmas Cognitive and Meaningful? ," Academic Freedom, Logic and
Religion (the symposia at the 1953 meeting of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophy Association), University of Pennsylvania Press, 1953. Untitled comment
204 BIBLIOGRAPHY
on Raphael Demos' contribution to the same symposium, Journal of Philosophy 52, No.5,1954.
"Same Questions Concerning Psychical Phenomena," Journal of the A merican Society for hychical Research 48, No.1, 1954.
"How Does One Discover What A Term Means?," Philosophical Review 43, No.1, 1954.
"International Conferences of Parapsychological Studies," Journal of the American Society for hychical Research 48, No.4, 1954.
"The Philosophical Importance of 'Psychical Phenomena'," Journal of Philosophy 51, No. 25, 1954.
"Knowing the Future,"Tomorrow 3, No.2, 1955. "On the Function and Nature of the Philosophy of Education," Harvard Educational
Review 26, No.2, 1956. "The John William Graham Collection of Literature of Psychic Science," Books at
Brown 18, No.1, 1956. "Concerning the Language of Religion," Philosophical Review 65, No.3, 1956. "On the Whole Beneficial to Serious Studies" (contribution to a Symposium on Seven
Questions concerning "The Search for Bridey Murphy"), Tomo"ow 4, No.4, 1956. "Science, Scientists, and Psychical Research," Journal of the American Society for
hychical Research 50, No.4, 1956. "What Could Survive?," Tomo"ow 5, No.1, 1956. "On the Analysis of Causality," Journal of Philosophy 54, No. 13, 1957. "Method of Investigation," Proceedings of Four Conferences of Parapsychological
Studies. New York: Parapsychology Foundation, 1957. "Determinism, Freedom and Responsibility," Determinism and Freedom in the Age of
Modern Science, ed. by Sidney Hook. New York: New York University Press, 1958. "Christianity, Rationality, and Faith" (A John Hershel Monon Lecture, Hamilton
College, 1954), Review of Religion 22, Nos. 3-4, 1958. "Physical Phenomena in Psychical Research," Journal of the American Society for
hychical Research 52, No. I, 1958. "The Guide of Life," The Key Reporter (Phi Beta Kappa Newsletter) 23, No.2, 1958.
"Mr. Ducasse Replies," No.3, a reply to a letter from a reader to the editor concerning "The Guide of Life".
"What Can Philosophy Contribute to Educational Theory?," Harvard Educational Review 28, No.· 4, 1958.
"Sanity in Education," Educational Summary, Crofts, Sept. 12, 1958. "Broad on the Relevance of Psychical Research to Philosophy," The Philosophy of
C.D. Broad, ed. by P.A. Schilpp. New York: The Tudor Publishing Company, 1959. "Psychoanalysis and Suggestion, Metaphysics and Temperament," hychoanalysis,
Scientific Method, and Philosophy, ed. by Sidney Hook. New York: New York University Press, 1959.
"What Has Science Done to Religion?," Centennial Review 3, No.2, 1959. "Causality and Parapsychology," Journal of Parapsychology 23, No.2, 1959. "Philosophy Can Become a Science," Revue Internationale de Philosophie 13, 1959. "How Good is the Evidence for Survival After Death?," Journal of the American
Society for hychical Research 53, No.3, 1959. "Life, Telism, and Mechanism," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 20, No.1,
1959.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 205
"In Defense of Dualism," Dimensions of Mind, ed. by Sidney Hook. New York: New York University Press, 1960.
Chapters 3, 7, 8, 9 and 10, Theories of Scientific Method: The RenaisBllnce Through the Nineteenth Century, by R.M. Blake, C.J. Ducasse,and E.H. Madden. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1960.
"How the Case of The Search for Bridney Murphy Stands Today" (a pre-publication of a chapter of A Critical Examination of the Belief in a Life After Death), Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research 54, No.1, 1960.
"The Doctrine of Reincarnation in the History of Thought" (a pre-publication of a chapter of A Critical Examination of the Belief in a Life after Death), International Journal of Parapsychology 2, No.3, 1960.
"What Metaphysics is Good for," Self, Religion and Metaphysics: EBBIlYs in Memory of James BiBBett Pratt, ed. by G.E. Myers. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1961.
"llie After Death Conceived as Reincarnation," In Search of God and Immoratity (The Garvin Free Lectures, VoL II). Boston: The Beacon Press, 1961.
"The Sources of the Emotional Import of an Aesthetic Object" (comment on Hayner's "Expressive Meaning in Art"), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 21, No.4, 1961.
"Some Comments on Professor Dommeyer's Criticisms" (comment on Dommeyer's "A Critical Examination of C.J. Ducasse's Metaphilosophy"), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 21, No.4, 1961.
"Concerning the Uniformity of Causality" (comment on Gale's "Professor Ducasse on Determinism"), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 22, No.1, 1961.
"Concerning the Logical Status of Criteria of Morality" (comment on Santoni's comment on Dommeyer's criticisms), Philosophy and. Phenomenological Research 23, No.1, 1962.
"What Would Constitute Conclusive Evidence of Survival after Death?," Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 41, No. 714, 1962.
"Early History of the Association for Symbolic Logic" (co-author Haskel B. Curry), Journal of Symbolic Logic 27, No.3, 1962.
Contribution to "The Future of Parapsychology: A Symposium," reported in Inter· national Journal of Parapsychology 4, No.2, 1962.
"Comments by C.J. Ducasse" (on AG.N. Flew's criticism of Ducasse's "What Would Constitute Conclusive Evidence of Survival after Death?"), Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 42, No. 716, 1963.
"Hypnotism, Suggestion, and Suggestibility," International Journal of Parapsychology 5, No.1, 1963.
"Addendum to 'Early History of the Association for Symbolic Logic'" (co-author Haskel B. Curry),Journal of Symbolic Logic 28, No.4, 1963.
"Substants, Capacities, and Tendencies," Review of Metaphysics 18, No.1, 1964. "Art and the Language of the Emotions," Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 23,
No. I, 1964. "Broad's Lectures on Psychical Research," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
24, No.4, 1964. "Causation: Perceivable? or Only Inferred?," Philosophy and Phenomenological
Research 26, No.2, 1965. "Minds, Matter, and Bodies," and comments on contributions' by others, Brain and
Mind, ed. by J.R. Smythies. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1965.
206 BIBLIOGRAPHY
"The Watseka Evidence" (comment on Dommeyer's "Body, Mind, and Death"), Pacific Philosophy Forum 3, No.3, 1965.
"Taste, Meaning, and Reality in Art," Art and Philosophy: A Svmposium, ed. by Sidney Hook. New York: New York University Press, 1966.
"'Cause' and 'Condition'" (comment on Gorovitz's "Causal Judgments and Causal Explanation"), Journal of Philosophy 63, No.9, 1966.
"Concerning Berofsky's 'Causality and General Laws'," Journal of Philosophy 63, No. 18, 1966.
"How Literally Causation is Perceivable" (comment on Ranken's "A Note on Ducasse's Perceivable Causation"), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 28, No.2,1967.
"Intrmsic Value" (comment on Beardsley's "Intrinsic Value"), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 28, No.3, 1968.
"Philosophy and Wisdom in Punishment and Reward" and "Reply to Comments," Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, ed. by E.H. Madden, M. Farber and R. Handy. Springfield, Dl.: Charles C. Thomas, 1968.
"Naturalism, and the Sense and Nonsense of 'Free-Will'," Phenomenology and Natural Existence: Essays in Honor of Marvin Farber, ed. by Dale Riepe. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1973.
UNPUBLISHED WRITINGS·
"The Principles of Universalism (The Program of a Metaphysics)," an earlier version of his doctoral dissertation, 1911.
"The Fallacy of Counteraction and Its Metaphysical Significance," a thesis submitted for the degree of doctor of philosophy, Harvard University, mid-year, 1912.
"The Nature and Number of the Categories," October 26, 1912. "The Lovestone and Other Dream-Spun Tales," ca. )920. Letter to the Editor of the Journal of Philosophy, December 11, 1928 ("I believe that
the correct answers to the questions raised by Mrs. Ladd-Franklin in the Dec. 6 issue of the Journal, would be ... ").
Lecture notes for course in philosophy of science given in 1930's, transcribed by Roderick M. Chisholm (as an undergraduate) from Ducasse's own notes.
"Conference Reports, No.4, Literature of Psychical Research, a few suggestions from Prof. C.J. Ducasse," undated.
59 Aphorisms, undated. "Design Relationships and Emotional Import," ca. 1943. Lecture notes for Philosophy 1, 2 (Philosophy and the Types of Human Experience),
1945-46. Lecture notes on morality, undated. Lecture notes for course in philosophy of education (Philosophy 54 or 154), given in
1952 and for someyears before and after. "When is There a Problem as to What a Term Means?," ca. 1954.
• These unpublished papers are in the archives of Brown University, John Hay Library.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 207
"Method in the Investigation of Spontaneous Paranormal Phenomena," presented at the Conference on Spontaneous Cases, organized by the (British) Society for Psychical Research and held at Newham College, Cambridge University, July 11-17, 1955.
"Does it Make Sense to Say that Death is Survived?," undated. "Biographical Notes Concerning C.J. Ducasse," undated. "What Reality Have the Past and the Future? ," presented to the New York Philosophy
Oub, Columbia University, Jan. 17, 1958. Notes of remarks made May 3, 1964 at conference on psychedelics at New School for
Social Research, New York City. Analytical Philosophy of Knowledge. A comprehensive restatement of his theory of
knowledge on which he was working in the last years of his life. The substance of several of the chapters were published as articles in the 1960's.
Voluminous correspondence with many philosophers, unclassified by topic, of much importance for the study of the philosophy of C.J. Ducasse.
INDEX OF NAMES
Adams, G.P. 8 Aiken, Henry 203 Alexander, Peter 2 Anselm 26 Austin, J.L. 35
Bacon, Francis 203 Barth, Karl 159 Baylis, Charles A. 7,99,100 Beardsley, Monroe 206 Beloff, John 184 Bennett, A.A. 7 Berkeley, George 6 Berofsky, Bernard 206 Blake, R.M. 200, 205 Blanshard, Brand 7,13,199,202 Bogholt 202 Boyce-Gibson, W.R. 25 Brightman, Edgar 166 Broad,C.D. 9,46,47,49,59,169,171,
179,182,184,204,205
Carnap, Rudolf 1,2 Chisholm, Roderick M. 2, 3, 12, 35,44,
45,47,49,60,61,62,63,64,87, 99, 206
Clifford, W.K. 148, 154 Collingwood, R.G. 201 Curry, Haskel B. 205
Das, Bhagavan 5 Davidson, Donald 35,44 Demos, Raphael 156, 157, 165, 203,
204 Descartes, Rene 80, 145 Dommeyer, Frederick C. 13, 85, 171,
179,180,182,184,199,205,206 Drake, Durant 56 Ducasse, Jean Louis 13 Ducasse, Mabel (nee Lisle) 7 Dynnik, M. 203
Edwards, Paul 13
Feigl, Herbert 155 Flew, A.G.N. 3, 10, 12, 13, 170, 171,
178, 182, 184, 205 Flewelling, R.T. 166
Gale, Richard 205 Galvani, L. 177 Gassendi 196 Gean, W.D. 44 Gorovitz, S. 33, 206 Greenlee, Douglas 64
Hare, P.H. 33, 34, 63, 99, 142, 143, 165
Harre, Rom 2, 33 Hartshorne, Charles 25,166 Hayner 205 Hendel, Charles W. 202 Henle, P. 7 Herschel, John 202 Holt, E.B. 55 Hospers, John 122 Hume, David 6, 20, 21, 22, 30, 31, 32,
38 Huntington, E. V. 7
James, William 3, 25, 30, 144-55 Johnson, W.E. 74
Kant, Immanuel 6 Kepler, 1. 193 Koehl, Richard 63
Ladd-Franklin, Christine 206 Lambrecht, Sterling 33, 34 Lamont, Corliss 166 Ledden, I.E. 199 Leibniz, G. 180 Leonard, H.S. 7 Lewis, C.l. 7, 203 Loewenberg, J. 8 Lovejoy, A.O. 56
Madden, E.H. 33, 34, 64, 155, 165, 205
Magaziner, Ira 121 Marvin, Walter T. 55 Maxwell, Nicholas 2 Michelet 165 Michotte, A. 58, 64 MilI,I.S. 20,21 Miller, Dickinson S. 3, 11, 144-55,
156
INDEX OF NAMES 209
Montague, W.P. 55 Moore, G.E. 2,46,47,49,50,59,63,
90,202 More, Thomas 113 Morris, Charles 3, 96, 99, 202 Murphy, Arthur 10, 13, 199, 202 Murphy, Gardner 11
Nagel, Ernest 98, 100, 202 Nelson, Everett 90 Newton, Isaac 180 Nietzsche, F. 110
Otto, Max 202
Parry, Wm.T. 7 Pascal, Th. 166 Perry, Ralph Barton 6,55, 144 Pitkin, W.B. 55 Plato 118 Pratt, J.B. 56 Price, H.H. 12, 166, 169
Quine, W. V. 7
Ranken, Nani L. 34, 206 Reddie, Cecil 4 Rhine, J.B. 171, 173, 175, 176 Riepe, Dale 13, 166 Roberts, Mrs 166 Rogers, A.K. 56 Romanell, Patrick 165
Royce, Josiah 6,7, 166 Russell, Bertrand 1 Ryle, Gilbert 3, 35,42, 113
Santayana, George 56 Santoni, Ronald E. 99, 199,205 Savery, W. 5 Schiller, F.C.S. 25 Schopenhauer, Arthur 6 Sellars, Roy Wood 56, 64, 72, 98, 202 Sellars, Wilfrid 3 Sheffer, H.M. 7 Sinnett, A.P. 166 Spaulding, E.G. 55 Stevens, H.C. 5, 7, 200 Stout, G.F. 25 Strong, C.A. 56
Taylor, Richard 2, 35, 44, 45 Tillich, Paul 159 Toistoi, Leo 124 Tomas, Vincent 3, 12, 33, 200 Tyrrell, G.N.M. 203
Urmson, J.~. 39 Ushenko, A.P. 89, 99
Wheatley, J.M.O. 200 Whewell, W. 203 Whitehead, A.N. 7,25,30,166 Wild, John 99, 202 Wittgenstein, L. 35
INDEX OF SUBJECTS
Accusatives, alien and connate, of perception 47-49
Action, theory of 35-44 Adverbial analysis
of pleasure 113f. of propositions 91-99
Adverbial realism 46-63 Aesthetic attitude, in 'aesthetic contempla-
tion 127-31 Agency, human 35-44 Analysis, concept of 191-95 Analytic philosophy, Ducasse as practi
tioner of If., 185-99 Art, emotionalist or expressionist theory
of 122-36 Artistic criticism, relativistic view of
136-43
Behavioristic theory of signs 96-98 Belief, ethics of, in Ducasse-Miller cor
respondence 144-54 Beliefs, and desires, as causes of human
action 35-44 Buddhism 162-65
Capacity defmition of 43 integration of capacities 85f.
Causality 14-33 in analysis of signs 96-98 events as causes 15, 19-21 in human action 35-44 between mental and physical substances
78-85
Death, survival of 167-69, 177-82 Desires, and beliefs, as causes of human
action 35-44 Determinism 43f. Dispositional analysis of properties
48-51 Dualism, mind-body 78-85 Ducasse, C.J.
academic history 3-9 action, theory of 35-44 adverbial realism 46-63 analysis of 'real' 186-91 analysis, concept of 191-95
aphorisms 9f. as Buddhist Quaker 162-65 cognitive meaninglessness of religious as
sertions 156f. defmition of 'religion' 157-59 defmitions of 'substant' and 'capacity'
42f. emotionalist or expressionist theory of
art 122-36 integration of causal capacities 85f. interactionism 78-85 liberal education 103-06 meta-ethics 101-03,110-11 meta-philosophy If., 185-99 monotheism 159-61 non-Humean view of causality 14-33 normative ethics \ 103-14 his personality 9-12 philosophy of education 114-20 philosophy as a science 196f. physical and mental substance 65-78 precognition 182f. propositions 88-91,99 psychical research 167-83 relativistic view of artistic criticism
136-42 signs and symbols 96-98 survival of death 167-69, 177-82 truth 91-96 unity of his philosophy 198f. Will to Believe and Right to Believe,
in Ducasse-Miller correspondence 144-54
wisdom 114f.
Education defmition of 117-20 liberal 103-06 philosophy of 114-20
Ethics, normative 103-14 Ethics, of belief, in Ducasse-Miller cor
respondence 144-54 as applied to monotheism, polytheism
and reincarnation 159-65 as applied to survival of death 167-69
Event, as cause 15, 19-21 Expression theory of art 122-36
INDEX OF SUBJECTS 211
F&eling adverbial analysis of 51 in expression theory of art 122-36
Feeling images, in art 126, 129
Hedonism 103-14
Images, of feelings in art 126, 129 Integration of capacities 85f. Interactionism 78-85 Introspection 47f.
Lan.,guage 96-98 Language of feeling, art as 124, 132f.
Meta-ethics -101-03, 110-11 Meta-philosophy If., 185-99 Method, philosophical If., 185-99 Mind-body relation 78-85 Monotheism 159-61
Necessity etiological or nonlogical 23-33 natural 32-33
Objective reference 52-55
Paranormal phenomena 167-83 Parapsychology 167-83 PerCeption
of etiological necessity 27-29 theory of 46-63
Philosophy as a science 196f. Pleasure, adverbial analysis of 113f. Polytheism 162-65 Precognition 182f.
Properties, dispositional analysis of 48-51
Propositions 88-91
'Real', analysis of 186-91 Realism
adverbial 46-63 new and critical 55-59 in aesthetics 134 f.
Reference, objective 52-55 Reincarnation 162-65 Relativism, in artistic criticism 136-43 Religion, deftnition of 157-59 Religious assertions, as cognitively mean
ingless 156f. Religious belief, in Ducasse-Miller cor
respondence 144-54 Right to Believe, in Ducasse-Miller cor
respondence 144-54
Science, philosophy as a 196f. Semantic analysis 185-99 Sensing
adverbial theory of 46-63 indubitable or incorrigible 59-63
Signs and symbols 96-98 Substance, mental and physical 65-78 Substants, and substances 42f.
Truth 91-96
Volitions, as causes 35-44
Will to Believe, in Ducasse-Miller correspondence 144-54
Wisdom 114f.